Archives


E-Government: Transformations in modes of rule?

Paul Henman
Macquarie University, NSW

Mitchell Dean
Macquarie University, NSW

Abstract

Recent developments in information technology have been accompanied by concerns involving public policy and government service delivery.

Calls are made for social policy to address an apparent digital divide, for public policy to encourage technological innovation in the new information society, and for government service delivery that uses new technology to support improved individualised service. At the same time, concerns are raised about increased surveillance and invasions of privacy. The rhetoric of New Public Management also sees new technologies are a means to improve government service delivery through the use of performance indicators and market-like forms of operation.

In what ways do these changes involve new forms of governing and the configuration of social relations? This paper outlines these issues being investigated in a three-year study of e-government.

Keywords

electronic government, information technologies, citizenship


Toggle references

References

Adler M and Henman P (2001) e-justice: A comparative study of computerization and procedural justice in social security, International Review of Law Computers and Technology 15(2): 195-212.

Adler M and Henman P (2002) ‘Computerising the Welfare State', unpublished mimeo, Department of Sociology, Macquarie University.

Alford K and Gullo N (2000) The Privatisation of Employment Services: Has it worked for the most disadvantaged? Economic Papers 19(1): 65-79.

Barry A (2001) Political Machines: Governing a Technological Society, London, Athlone Press.

Barry A, Osborne T and Rose N (ed) (1996) Foucault and Political Reason, London, University of Chicago Press.

Bellamy C and Taylor JA (1998) Governing in the Information Age, Buckingham: Open University Press.

Burchell G, Gordon C and Miller P (ed) (1991) The Foucault Effect, London, Harvester Wheatsheaf.

Cahill L (1994) Data-Matching in the Social Security System, Social Security Journal June: 98-108.

Dean M (1996) Putting the technological into government, History of the Human Sciences 9(3): 47-68.

Dean, M (1999) Governmentality: power and rule in modern society, London, Sage.

Dean M (2002) Liberal government and authoritarianism, Economy and Society 31(1): 37-61.

Dean M and Hindess B (ed) (1998) Governing Australia, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Frissen P (1999) Politics, Governance and Technology: A postmodern narrative on the virtual state, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar.

Foucault M (1977) Discipline and Punish: The birth of the prison, New York, Vintage Books.

Foucault M (1981) Omnes et Singulatim: Towards a Criticism of ‘Political Reason', The Tanner Lectures on Human Values II: 223-254.

Foucault M (1982) The Subject and Power, Afterword in HL Dreyfus and P Rabinow, Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics, Sussex, Harvester Press, pp.208-226.

Hacking I (1982) 'Biopower and the avalanche of printed numbers, Humanities in Society 5: 279-295.

Haywood T (1995) Info-rich/info-poor: access and exchange in the global information society, London, Bowker-Saur.

Heeks R (ed) (1999) Reinventing Government in the Information Age: International practice in IT-enabled public sector reform, London, Routledge.

Henman P (1997) Computer technology - a political player in social policy processes, Journal of Social Policy 26(3): 323-340.

Henman P (1999) The bane and benefits of computers in Australia's Department of Social Security, International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 19(1/2): 101-129.

Hindess B (1998) Neo-liberalism and the National Economy, in M Dean and B Hindess (ed) Governing Australia: Studies in contemporary rationalities of government, Melbourne, Cambridge University Press, pp.210-226.

Lyon D (1994) The Electronic Eye: the rise of surveillance society, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press.

Lyon D (2001) Surveillance Society: monitoring everyday life, Buckingham, Open University Press.

Loader BD (ed) (1998) Cyberspace divide, New York, Routledge.

Rose N. and Miller, P (1992) 'Political power beyond the State', British Journal of Sociology 43(2): 173-205.

Norris C and Armstrong G (1999) The Maximum Surveillance Society: the rise of CCTV, Oxford, Berg.

Petersen A, Barns I, Dudley J and Harris P (ed) (1999) Poststructualism, Citizenship and Social Policy, London, Routledge.

Scheepers AWA (1994) Informatization in Street-level Bureaucracies: Bureaucratic Competence and Discretion in Dutch Municipal Social Services Departments, Informatization and the Public Sector 3: 47-61.

Siefert M, Gerbner G and Fisher J (ed) (1989) The Information Gap, New York, Oxford University Press.



Web Feed

Latest Articles

Call for Papers

Innovation Policy in the Creative Industries
Volume 11/2
Deadline: 30th Jan 2009


Network Analysis Application in Innovation Studies
Volume 11/3
Deadline: 1st Mar 2009


Public Sector Innovation
Volume 12/1
Deadline: 29th Jul 2009


Innovation in Social Entrepreneurship
Volume 12/3
Deadline: 1st Mar 2010


Special Issues

Innovation in Social Entrepreneurship


Public Sector Innovation


Network Analysis Application in Innovation Studies


Innovation Policy in the Creative Industries


Innovation and the City – Innovative Cities
Contents


Food Related Innovation: Technology, Genetics and Consumer Impacts
Summary | Contents


Nurturing the Knowledge Tree: CSIRO in Australia's Innovation Systems
Summary | Contents


Innovation in China: Harmonious Transformation?
Summary | Contents


Innovation and Economic Development: Lessons from Latin America
Contents


Biotechnology and Telecommunications
Summary | Contents


Corporate Sustainability: Governance, Innovation Strategy, Development and Methods
Contents


Sponsored Links

Selected Articles

2003 Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science


Banking technology, technological learning and competition


The Nexus between sustainability and innovation


Strategic Food Solutions


The 24th International Strategic Management Society Conference, Puerto Rico, October 31-November 3, 2004


Exchange and knowledge flows between large firms and research institutions


Website by Arrowsmith Websites. Business, Government & Corporate Websites, Web Hosting, Domain Names & SEO. Maleny, Sunshine Coast, Australia.